Title: Electronic Commerce Ninth Edition
1Electronic CommerceNinth Edition
- Chapter 12Planning for Electronic Commerce
2Learning Objectives
- In this chapter, you will learn about
- Planning electronic commerce initiatives
- Strategies for developing electronic commerce Web
sites - Managing electronic commerce implementations
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3Identifying Benefits and Estimating Costs of
Electronic Commerce Initiatives
- Information technology projects
- Keys to successful implementation
- Planning and execution
- Successful electronic commerce initiative
business plan activities - Identifying initiatives specific objectives
- Linking objectives to business strategies
- Setting electronic commerce initiative objectives
- Consider strategic role of project, intended
scope, resources available
4Identifying Objectives
- Typical business electronic commerce objectives
- Increasing existing markets sales
- Opening new markets
- Serving existing customers better
- Identifying new vendors
- Coordinating more efficiently with existing
vendors - Recruiting employees more effectively
- Objectives vary with organization size
- Compare e-commerce risk to inaction risk
5Linking Objectives to Business Strategies
- Downstream strategies
- Tactics to improve the value businesses provide
to customers - Upstream strategies
- Focus on reducing costs or generating value
- Web use for businesses
- Attractive sales channel for many firms
- Complement business strategies, improve
competitive positions
6Linking Objectives to Business Strategies
(contd.)
- Electronic commerce activities difficult to
measure - First-wave e-commerce activities
- Existed without setting specific, measurable
goals - Plenty of investors for highly speculative
activities - Successes and failures measured in broad strokes
- Second-wave e-commerce activities
- Businesses take closer look at benefits and costs
- Good implementation plan
- Sets specific objectives for benefits achieved
and costs incurred
7Identifying and Measuring Benefits
- Some electronic commerce initiatives
- Obvious, tangible, easy to measure
- Example increased sales or reduced costs
- Other electronic commerce initiatives
- More difficult to measure
- Example increased customer satisfaction
- Identifying objectives
- Set measurable objectives
- Include intangible benefits
8Identifying and Measuring Benefits (contd.)
- Using Web sites to build brands or enhance
existing marketing programs - Set goals in terms of increased brand awareness
- Measured by market research surveys, opinion
polls - Companies selling goods or services online
- Measure sales volume in units or dollars
- Complicated to measure brand awareness or sales
- Increase due to other things company doing
- Increase due to time or general improvement in
the economy
9Identifying and Measuring Benefits (contd.)
- Using Web sites to improve customer service or
after-sale support - Set goals of increased customer satisfaction
- Reduce customer service or support costs
- Example Philips Lighting
- Provided Web ordering system for smaller
customers - Primary goal reduce cost of processing smaller
orders - Built pilot Web site and had smaller customers
try it - Results customer service phone calls from test
group dropped by 80 percent
10Identifying and Measuring Benefits (contd.)
- Measurements of other electronic commerce
initiatives - Supply chain managers
- Measure supply cost reductions, quality
improvements, faster deliveries of ordered goods - Auction sites
- Set goals for number of auctions, number of
bidders and sellers, dollar volume of items sold,
number of items sold, number of registered
participants
11Identifying and Measuring Benefits (contd.)
- Measurements of other electronic commerce
initiatives (contd.) - Virtual communities and Web portals
- Measure number of visitors, quality of visitors
experiences - Metrics
- Measurements companies make to assess value of
benefits - Use online surveys
- Use estimates length of time each visitor
remains on site, how often visitors return
12FIGURE 12-1 Measuring the benefits of electronic
commerce initiatives
13Identifying and Measuring Benefits (contd.)
- Benefit unit of measure
- Convert raw activity measurements to dollars
- Can compare benefits to costs
- Can compare net benefit of a particular
initiative to net benefits provided by other
projects - Difficult to measure value in dollars
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14Identifying and Estimating Costs
- Information technology project costs
- Difficult to estimate and control
- Web development
- Uses rapidly changing hardware and software
technologies - Hardware costs are downward
- Increasing software sophistications
- Provides ever-increasing demand for more newer,
cheaper hardware - Yields net increase in overall hardware costs
15Identifying and Estimating Costs (contd.)
- Total cost of ownership (TCO)
- Includes all costs related to activity
- Electronic commerce implementation TCO includes
- Hardware costs, software costs, outsourced design
work, employee salaries and benefits, site
maintenance - Good TCO number
- Includes assumptions about how often site would
need to be redesigned in the future
16Identifying and Estimating Costs (contd.)
- Opportunity cost
- Cost of not undertaking an initiative
- Largest and most significant costs associated
with electronic commerce initiative - Foregone benefits that company could have
obtained from electronic commerce initiative not
pursued
17Identifying and Estimating Costs (contd.)
- Web site costs
- Total dollar amounts required to create and
operate a Web site - Varied over the years
- Relative proportion of costs remained stable
- 10 percent computer hardware
- 10 percent software
- 80 percent labor
- Annual cost of operating an online business Web
site - Remained stable
- Ranges between 50 and 200 percent of site initial
cost
18Identifying and Estimating Costs (contd.)
- Web site costs (contd.)
- Small online store
- Placed into operations for less than 5000
- Small to midsize online business operation
- With full transaction and payment processing
capabilities - Initial investment between 50,000 and 1
million - Average 80,000
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19FIGURE 12-2 Estimated costs for business Web sites
20Identifying and Estimating Costs (contd.)
- Web site costs (contd.)
- Costs generally heading downward
- Due to lower costs for broadband access and
computer hardware - Comparison of Netscape with more recent startup
companies - Netscape (early 1990s) more than 40 million
- Digg (2004) less than 500,000
- Important element of annual Web site operating
cost - Choice of Web hosting service provider
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21FIGURE 12-3 Important Web hosting service features
22Funding Online Business Startups
- Early Web businesses
- Started by individuals with knowledge of
computers, technology, business - Late 1990s Web businesses
- Started by investors wanting to make fast money
- Angel investors funded initial startup
- Became stockholders hoping business grows rapidly
- Sell interest to venture capitalist
23Funding Online Business Startups (contd.)
- Venture capitalists
- Very wealthy individuals, investment firms
- Look for small companies about to grow rapidly
- Hope for rapid growth and initial public offering
- Initial public offering (IPO)
- Selling stock to public
24Funding Online Business Startups (contd.)
- System of financing startup and initial growth of
online businesses - Benefits
- Access to large amounts of capital early
- Costs
- Investors, capitalists got most profits, pressure
to grow rapidly
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25Funding Online Business Startups (contd.)
- Decrease need for venture capitalists and angel
investors by - Relieving pressure to grow rapidly
- Becoming more creative
- Learning from mistakes
- Trending toward more and smaller online ventures
- Online business creation costs falling
26Comparing Benefits to Costs
- Capital projects (capital investments)
- Major investments in equipment, personnel, other
assets - Techniques to evaluate proposed capital projects
- Range from simple calculations to complex
computer simulation models - Reduce to comparison of benefits and costs
27Comparing Benefits to Costs (contd.)
- Key parts of creating electronic commerce
initiatives business plan - Identify potential benefits
- Identify costs required to generate benefits
- Evaluate whether benefits exceed costs
28FIGURE 12-4 Cost/benefit evaluation of electronic
commerce strategy elements
29Return on Investment (ROI)
- Return on investment (ROI) techniques
- Measures amount of income (return) provided by
specific current expenditure (investment) - Examples
- Payback method, net present value method,
internal rate of return - Provides quantitative expression of comfortable
benefit-to-cost margin - Mathematically adjusts for future reduced value
of benefits
30Return on Investment (ROI) (contd.)
- Electronic commerce initiatives
- Seen as absolutely necessary investments
- Not always subjected to close examination, rigid
requirements - Companies fear being left behind
- Perceived value in new market early positioning
allows - Many companies to invest large amounts of money
- With few near-term profit prospects
- Example first wave of newspaper Web sites
31Return on Investment (ROI) (contd.)
- Electronic commerce second wave of Web-related
expenditures - Being reviewed for ROI
- ROI built-in biases
- ROI requires all costs, benefits be stated in
dollars - Gives undue weight to costs
- ROI focuses on predicted benefits
- Initiatives have returned benefits not foreseen
32Return on Investment (ROI) (contd.)
- ROI built-in biases (contd.)
- ROI tends to emphasize short-run benefits over
long-run benefits - More information
- CIO Budget site
- ROI Knowledge Center Web pages
33Strategies for Developing Electronic Commerce Web
Sites
FIGURE 12-5 Evolution of Web site functions
34Strategies for Developing Electronic Commerce Web
Sites (contd.)
- Transformation occurred rapidly
- Web site development and management slower
- Today Web site seen as collections of software
applications - Companies using tools to manage site
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35Internal Development vs. Outsourcing
- Initiatives success dependency
- How well initiative integrates into and supports
business activities - Internal people leading projects ensures
- Companys specific needs are addressed
- Initiative congruent with organization goals,
culture - Outside consultants
- Seldom able to learn enough about organizations
culture to accomplish objectives
36Internal Development vs. Outsourcing (contd.)
- Few companies launch an electronic commerce
project without some external help - Key to success
- Finding balance between outside and inside
support - Outsourcing
- Hiring another company to provide outside support
for all or part of project
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37Internal Development vs. Outsourcing (contd.)
- The internal team
- First step in outsourcing decision making
- Create internal team
- Team members
- People knowledgeable about the Internet and its
technologies - Creative thinkers
- Distinguished within the company
38Internal Development vs. Outsourcing (contd.)
- The internal team (contd.)
- Project lead
- Mistake technical wizard, not business
knowledgeable, not well known - Better choice person with business knowledge,
creativity, respect of firms operating function
managers, good sense of goals and culture - Measuring team achievement important
- Not necessarily monetarily
- Express in terms appropriate to initiative
objectives
39Internal Development vs. Outsourcing (contd.)
- The internal team (contd.)
- Intellectual capital
- Employees knowledge about the business and its
processes - Ignored in the past
- Value recognized today
- Human capital measures
- Include employee competencies
- Include value of customer loyalty and business
partnerships
40Internal Development vs. Outsourcing (contd.)
- The internal team (contd.)
- Responsible for initiative
- From setting objectives to final implementation
- Internal team decides
- Project parts to outsource
- Outsourcer
- Consultants or partners needed
41Internal Development vs. Outsourcing (contd.)
- Early outsourcing
- Company outsources initial site design and
development to launch project quickly - Outsourcing team trains companys information
systems professionals before handing site
operation to them - Companys own information systems people work
closely with outsourcing team - Develop ideas for improvements as early as
possible in project life
42Internal Development vs. Outsourcing (contd.)
- Late outsourcing
- More traditional approach
- Companys information systems professionals
- Perform initial design and development work,
implement system, and operate system until stable
part of business operation - Once competitive advantage gained
- Electronic commerce system maintenance outsourced
- Companys information systems professionals turn
attention and talents to developing new
technologies, providing further competitive
advantage
43Internal Development vs. Outsourcing (contd.)
- Partial outsourcing
- Also called component outsourcing
- Company identifies specific project portions
- Can be completely designed, developed,
implemented, and operated by another firm
specializing in a particular function - Examples
- Smaller Web sites outsource e-mail handling and
response functions - Electronic payment system
44Internal Development vs. Outsourcing (contd.)
- Partial outsourcing examples (contd.)
- Web hosting activity
- Service providers usually willing to accommodate
requests for variety of service levels - Service provider has continuous staffing and
expertise - 24/7 operation running 24 hours a day, seven
days a week - Service providers offer wide range of services
- Some service providers specialize
45New Methods for Implementing Partial Outsourcing
- New ways of implementing partial outsourcing
strategy evolved specifically for Web businesses - Incubator
- Offers start-up companies physical location with
offices, accounting and legal assistance,
computers, Internet connections - Very low monthly cost
- May offer seed money, management advice,
marketing assistance - Receives ownership interest in company
46New Methods for Implementing Partial Outsourcing
(contd.)
- Incubators (contd.)
- Incubator sells all or part of its interest
- Company grows to obtain venture capital
financing, launch stock public offering - First Internet incubators Idealab
- Helped CarsDirect.com, Overture, Tickets.com
- Todays focus own internally generated ideas
47New Methods for Implementing Partial Outsourcing
(contd.)
- Incubators (contd.)
- Company created internal incubators
- Develop technologies for use in main business
operations - 1980s programs unsuccessful and shut down
- Matsushita Electrics U.S. Panasonic division
- Started internal incubators to help launch new
companies to become important strategic partners - Individual management teams retained
- More successful
48New Methods for Implementing Partial Outsourcing
(contd.)
- Fast venturing
- Existing company wants to launch electronic
commerce initiative - Joins external equity partners and operational
partners offering experience, skills needed - Equity partners usually banks, venture
capitalists - Equity partners sometimes offer money
- Equity partners more likely to offer experience
49New Methods for Implementing Partial Outsourcing
(contd.)
- Fast venturing (contd.)
- Operational partners firms
- Systems integrators, consultants, Web portals
- Experienced in moving projects along, scaling up
prototypes
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50FIGURE 12-6 Elements of fast venturing
51Managing Electronic Commerce Implementations
- Best way to manage complex electronic commerce
implementation - Use formal management techniques
- Project management
- Project portfolio management
- Specific staffing
- Postimplementation audits
52Project Management
- Project management
- Collection of formal techniques for planning and
controlling activities undertaken to achieve
specific goal - Developed by U.S. military, defense contractors
- Project plan criteria
- Cost, schedule, performance
- Helps management make trade-off decisions
involving the three criteria
53Project Management (contd.)
- Project management software
- Specific application software to help project
managers oversee projects - Examples
- Primavera P6, Microsoft Project
- Open Workbench open-source project management
software package offering many of the same
features as the leading commercial products - Helps team manage tasks assigned to consultants,
technology partners, outsourced service providers
54Project Management (contd.)
- Examining costs and completion times
- Learn about project progression
- Revise future estimated costs, completion times
- Risks of information systems development
projects - Running out of control, ultimately failing
- Causes rapidly changing technologies, long
development times, changing customer expectations - Teams rely on project management software
- Helps achieve project goals
55Project Management (contd.)
- Electronic commerce uses rapidly changing
technologies - Relatively short development times
- Technology, user expectations have less time to
change - Initiatives more successful (in general)
- More information
- Project Management Institute
56Project Portfolio Management
- Project portfolio management
- Technique whereby project is monitored like an
investment in a financial portfolio - Allows tradeoffs between cost, schedule, and
quality across projects as well as within
individual projects - Provides more flexibility in allocating resources
to achieve the best set of benefits from all
projects in the most timely manner - Project management software
- Designed to handle individual projects
- Not suited for consolidating activities
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57Project Portfolio Management (contd.)
- CIO assigns ranking for each project based on
- Its importance to the strategic goals of the
business - Its level of risk (probability of failure)
- CIO uses any methods financial managers use to
evaluate risk of making investments in business
assets
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58Staffing for Electronic Commerce
- Chief information officer (CIO)
- Organizations top technology manager
- Responsibilities
- Overseeing all information systems and related
technological elements required to undertake and
operate online business activities - Business manager
- Member of internal team setting project
objectives - Responsible for implementing business plan
elements, reaching objectives set by internal team
59Staffing for Electronic Commerce (contd.)
- Project manager
- Person with specific training, skills in tracking
costs and accomplishment of specific project
objectives - Project portfolio manager
- Usually promoted from the ranks of the project
managers - Responsible for tracking all ongoing projects and
managing them as a portfolio - Account manager
- Keeps track of multiple Web sites in use or keeps
track of projects combining into larger Web site
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60Staffing for Electronic Commerce (contd.)
- Applications specialists
- Maintain accounting, human resources, logistics
software - Web programmers
- Design and write underlying code for dynamic
database-driven Web pages - Web graphics designer
- Trained in art, layout, composition
- Understands how Web pages are constructed
61Staffing for Electronic Commerce (contd.)
- Content creators
- Write original content
- Content managers or content editors
- Purchase existing material and adapt it for use
on the site - Social networking administrator
- Responsible for managing virtual community
elements of the Web operation
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62Staffing for Electronic Commerce (contd.)
- Online marketing manager
- Specializes in specific techniques used to build
brands and increase market share - Uses Web site and other online tools e-mail
marketing - Customer service personnel
- Design and implement customer relationship
management activities in electronic commerce
operation
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63Staffing for Electronic Commerce (contd.)
- Call center
- Company handling incoming customer telephone
calls, e-mails for other companies - Makes sense for smaller companies
- Systems administrator
- Responsible for systems reliable, secure
operation
64Staffing for Electronic Commerce (contd.)
- Network operations staff functions include
- Load estimation and load monitoring
- Resolving network problems as they arise
- Designing and implementing fault-resistant
technologies - Managing any network operations outsourced to
service providers or telephone companies
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65Staffing for Electronic Commerce (contd.)
- Database administration function support
activities include - Transaction processing, order entry, inquiry
management, shipment logistics - Activity requirements
- Existing database into which site being
integrated - Separate database established for electronic
commerce initiative
66Postimplementation Audits
- Postimplementation audit (postaudit review)
- Formal review of project
- After up and running
- Examine project items established in planning
stage - Compare to what actually happened
- Objectives, performance specifications, cost
estimates, scheduled delivery dates - Blame identification approach
- Used more in the past
- Focused on identifying individuals to blame for
cost overruns, missed delivery dates
67Postimplementation Audits (contd.)
- Feedback on strategies used more today
- Obtains valuable information
- Useful in planning future projects
- Gives participants meaningful learning experience
- Comprehensive audit report
- Analyzes projects overall performance
- How well project administered
- Appropriate project organizational structure in
place - Specific project team(s) performance
- Should compare actual results to objectives
68Change Management
- Information system projects involve change
- Employee concerns
- Ability to cope with changes, ability to continue
to do good work, job security - Concerns lead to increased stress
- Change management
- Process of helping employees cope with changes
- Includes tactics designed to help employees feel
involved with change - Helps employees overcome feelings of powerlessness
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69Summary
- Key elements of e-commerce business plans
- Setting objectives in measurable terms
- Derived from initiatives overall goals
- Include planned benefits and planned costs
- Evaluate cost-benefit
- ROI evaluation technique
- Determine outsourcing strategy, staffing
- Project management
- Postimplementation audit
- Managing change